8,097 research outputs found

    Journal of Asian Finance, Economics and Business, v. 4, no. 1

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    A Citizen Observatory Approach for Developing a Disease Outbreak Early Warning System

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    In health matters, early warning systems are timely surveillance systems that collect information on epidemic-prone diseases to trigger prompt public health interventions. However, these systems rarely apply statistical methods to detect changes in trends or sentinel events that would require intervention. Often, they rely on an in-depth review done by epidemiologists of the data coming in, which is rarely done systematically. This research introduced the use of ICT for collecting and analyzing citizen observations on disease trends and outbreaks. A citizen observatory ICT tool, which utilizes mobile and web features was developed. Data was collected on symptoms observed from diseases in four locations within Nairobi city. The system made use of mathematical models and outlier detection techniques to detect observations that deviated from the expected pattern in the dataset. New clusters were considered as outliers and the system flagged them as potential outbreaks. We clustered data using a K-Means algorithm and the Euclidean distance of each object from its corresponding cluster centre was obtained. From the results, the developed prototype was able to detect an outbreak of Flu and URTI diseases for the period of study. The proposed tool can therefore enhance the management of risks associated with disease outbreaks.  Keywords: Early Warning Systems, citizen observatory, health surveillance, Outlier Detection, Modeling disease outbreak

    Social media and public policy

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    Introduction: Government and public service delivery is taking place in a changed world. A significant level of social, economic and political activity is now happening on the internet.As people buy and sell goods, search for information, browse the web and share their day–to–day experiences with colleagues, friends and family through social networks, they produce an enormous amount of data.The use of this data to develop insights is growing rapidly. In the private sector it is being used to enhance decision making, understand customer behaviour, improve operational efficiency and identify new markets.The new information environment also obliges government to develop new capabilities to understand the information available and to compete for attention and influence within it.Part of the challenge in embracing the digital age is that, in the midst of rapid change, it’s very difficult to know where to place your bets. We do not yet know exactly what access to large volumes of social data will mean for our society. It certainly will not present a panacea for long–standing social problems; but it can add another dimension to our understanding of them.This report considers whether social media data can improve the quality and timeliness of the evidence base that informs public policy. Can the myriad of human connections and interactions on the web provide insight to enable government to develop better policy, understand its subsequent impact and inform the many different organisations that deliver public services?The report is based on an evaluation of available literature and interviews with 25 experts from a number of disciplines. Given that developments in this field are at such an early stage, it aims to provide helpful signposts rather than definitive answers

    Congress' Wicked Problem: Seeking Knowledge Inside the Information Tsunami

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    The lack of shared expert knowledge capacity in the U.S. Congress has created a critical weakness in our democratic process. Along with bipartisan cooperation, many contemporary and urgent questions before our legislators require nuance, genuine deliberation and expert judgment. Congress, however, is missing adequate means for this purpose and depends on outdated and in some cases antiquated systems of information referral, sorting, communicating, and convening. Congress is held in record low esteem by the public today. Its failings have been widely analyzed and a multitude of root causes have been identified. This paper does not put forward a simple recipe to fix these ailments, but argues that the absence of basic knowledge management in our legislature is a critical weakness. Congress struggles to make policy on complex issues while it equally lacks the wherewithal to effectively compete on substance in today's 24 hour news cycle.This paper points out that Congress is not so much venal and corrupt as it is incapacitated and obsolete. And, in its present state, it cannot serve the needs of American democracy in the 21st Century.The audience for this paper is those who are working in the open government, civic technology and transparency movements as well as other foundations, think tanks and academic entities. It is also for individuals inside and outside of government who desire background about Congress' current institutional dilemmas, including lack of expertise

    Organisational Prerequisites For Application Service Provision Adoption

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    Programmes in transition - between closure and start. Review of programme developments: Winter-Summer 2007

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    The past six months have seen a shift in emphasis from the 2000-2006 to the 2007-2013 programmes. Programme managers and other implementing organisations have not only been negotiating draft programmes for 2007-2013 with European Commission staff, but have also been undertaking a range of tasks to prepare for implementing these programmes. A number of initiatives have also occurred at EU level, which direct policymakers’ attention forward to the EU budget review of 2008-2009 and beyond. In addition, ongoing efforts have been needed to ensure that the remaining funds under the 2000-2006 programmes are effectively absorbed, and that all technical preparations for programme closure are underway

    Information Outlook, March 2007

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    Volume 11, Issue 3https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_io_2007/1002/thumbnail.jp

    BS News November/December

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    Information Outlook, December 2005

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    Volume 9, Issue 12https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_io_2005/1011/thumbnail.jp

    Big data for monitoring educational systems

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    This report considers “how advances in big data are likely to transform the context and methodology of monitoring educational systems within a long-term perspective (10-30 years) and impact the evidence based policy development in the sector”, big data are “large amounts of different types of data produced with high velocity from a high number of various types of sources.” Five independent experts were commissioned by Ecorys, responding to themes of: students' privacy, educational equity and efficiency, student tracking, assessment and skills. The experts were asked to consider the “macro perspective on governance on educational systems at all levels from primary, secondary education and tertiary – the latter covering all aspects of tertiary from further, to higher, and to VET”, prioritising primary and secondary levels of education
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